"We have to teach them how to play the game the right way and get the fans excited,'' Pappas told The New York Times
that July. ''Hopefully, they can start playing at 5 years old and be no
different than us. But they have to start at that young age.''

Pappas joined the "ragtag" Greek team after being out of baseball for eight years. He last played professionally in 1996, working in the interim as a stock trader. The Chicago-native fit the Olympic requirement. His father was Greek and his grandfather lived in Greece.

Pappas'
pro career started 20 years earlier, in 1984, taken sixth overall by
the Angels. He spent four years in the Angels system before being picked up by the Cubs for 1989.

With
the Cubs' AA team the Charlotte Knights, Pappas made a name for
himself. It wasn't at his usual position of catcher, but he was making his name everywhere else.

He'd played seven different positions for the Knights by July 2, including pitcher, which he played that night in a blow-out loss.

"I've never done anything like this before," Pappas told The Rock Hill Herald. He hadn't pitched since Little League. He added later, "I'm just glad to get in the line up any way I can."

He made AAA Iowa
in 1990 and Chicago for seven games in 1991. Going through the Royals'
system, then the White Sox' system in 1992, Pappas signed with the
Cardinals for 1993.

It was 1993 that turned out to be
Pappas' most productive year, playing in 82 games with St. Louis and
posting a .276 batting average. He even had a 16-game hitting streak that year, not equaled by a Cardinals catcher for 14 years.

Pappas played 15 more games for the Cardinals in 1994 and his major league career was done. Two more years in the minors and his pro career was done.

Pappas joined the Greek team, alongside future star Nick Markakis, after having been found by an Orioles' international scout. Orioles owner, Greek-American Peter Angelos, bankrolled the team, according to Baseball America.

"I was playing absolutely no baseball," Pappas told Baseball America
that July. "I had no interest in playing in those over-30 leagues. I
heard about the Olympics and Greece maybe having a team about five years
ago, and thought, "That's great. I'll be 38.' I didn't think the team
would concern me."

But the 38-year-old major leaguer-turned-stock trader played. He even hit a home run.

Pappas has since started a coaching career. In 2015, he's serving as hitting coach with the Cardinals at AA Springfield.